Red Memories
Haunted Echoes
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This is an important topic to discuss - this question of racism vs. 'reverse-racism'.
I encountered the idea that racism = prejudice + power when I was taking a multicultural counseling class, and so it was expanded on a bit. I hope others will fill in the gaps of what I say.
When there is a power imbalance in society, the same motivations and actions can produce different results. To a limited degree one can reframe this larger notion of power imbalance by different individual roles that have a power imbalance. Consider teacher/student, employer/employee, adult/child, cop/civilian, counselor/client, etc. In each of these instance, if the individual holding the power commits a moral violation towards the one with less power, the result is more severe. If the teacher openly mocks a student it is different than when the student mocks a teacher. If a counselor tells a client they are a worthless piece of crap it is different than when a client says it to a counselor. Behaviors that are hurtful can always be wrong, but there is a way a student knows that their mocking has a different effect than if they were the teacher. In this way degree of social power serves as an amplifier for the behavior.
These examples are limited because one in power is dominant for other reasons than simply racial privilege. But the basic notion can extend to racial privilege. When the woman in the dog park threatened to call the police on the black man, it was a different action than if he threatened to call the police for her behavior. The assumed result is different and so the same behavior is different because of context. There is a motivation, a behavior, but then the context contributes to defining it.
At the point where a person is permanently maimed or murdered, then some of these notions change. If a student murders a teacher, it is not a less atrocity than if the teacher murders a student. In that instance the result of the behavior is the same and so in a way the power is the same. There can be different levels of this sociologically though, if the murder of one results in more similar murders because the victim has less social power, then even that could represent that difference in power, although at the individual level I still see the same line crossed and should be subjected to the same laws and punishments.
I really think this topic should be explored more comprehensively, and so I hope others will add to what I'm trying to say here.
When I took sociology, the difference between racism and prejudice was defined to me in this way.
Prejudice is when you view any group of people, and assume something about them based on some feature. For instance, I was homeschooled, and due to this many people who know little of homeschooling assumed my parents really didn't do much, that I was sheltered, or that I was kept home to be brainwashed by religion. This is a prejudice. Thinking a black man in a black hoodie will rob you is a prejudice. Assuming a white cop is racist is a prejudice. You can be prejudice against items even. For instance, my mother told me that romance books with stencilly pencil looking drawn covers are usually chicklit that is super smutty. after picking one up and having the experience, if I pick up a book with that sort of cover I place it back on the shelf. I am now prejudice against romance books with pencil stencil drawn like covers.
Racism involves an active belief that you, somehow, are superior to another person due to your skin color. The thing is, this could apply to any person. A white person who demeans a black person for their color is in fact racist. A mexican who demeans an asian for their skin color is racist. A black person who demeans a white person for the color of their skin is in fact racist. For someone to be racist, you have to assume the interaction you're having wouldn't happen if you weren't black/white/asian etc. Which is a dilemma I have. Not every discourse with a black person is racist, it isn't because their black. If I get in an argument with a mexican friend I really don't think my mexican friend is being racist to me. The only time I ever felt "racism" in any sense was as I said, that student told me he wanted to leave my state because there's too many white people here. It felt kinda distasteful, but I try to assume maybe he is just a hurting person inside and needed to see white people aren't all spiteful to him. The same as whites can be taught to hate blacks, I think many blacks are taught to hate whites by agendas, media, or who knows what. I found it amazing we had a foreign exchange student from the Netherlands in my social work 101 class, and my teacher asked him how race relations were in Europe where he was. He said America was so much kinder. There they still segregate in some areas. I know my mother knows people online in Italy who say how the North and South judge each other by skin colors too. It is just fascinating how things get warped to meet some grand idea and people just string along. I do not deny racism exists, or perhaps there are still systems in place disproportionately affecting populations of people, but I do think reverse racism is a thing we need to stop ignoring too.
I will be honest, I have no issue with protesting of systematic racism issues, although I feel it is more like a systematic poverty issue which sadly blacks are disproportionately affected. However I also have an issue mainly with a bigger issue of militarization of police forces. My psychology teacher showed us some data points, of people killed by police back when I first began college...this was back in 2016ish when this first hit its head. Blacks do face issues, but fuck, about 300 WHITE PEOPLE were killed by cops, some unarmed, some excessive force. and I'm thinking GOD, THERE'S A BIGGER ISSUE HERE. COPS SHOULD NOT BE KILLING THIS MANY PEOPLE PERIOD. There's keeping law and order then there's just being trained to be so on edge you just shoot to kill practically anytime there's an issue.